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Morpholino Oligonucleotide Crosslinked Hydrogels as Portable Optical Oligonucleotide Biosensors Geraint Langford, Jaclyn Raeburn, David C Ferrier, Philip J.W. Hands, and Michael Patrick Shaver ACS Sens., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acssensors.8b01208 • Publication Date (Web): 28 Dec 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on January 2, 2019
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ACS Sensors
Morpholino Oligonucleotide Crosslinked Hydrogels as Portable Optical Oligonucleotide Biosensors. Geraint J. Langford,a Jaclyn Raeburn,a David C. Ferrier,b Philip J. W. Hands,b,* and Michael P. Shavera,* School of Chemistry, David Brewster Road, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, EH9 3FJ, UK. Institute for Integrated Micro and Nano Systems, School of Engineering, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, EH9 3JL, UK. KEYWORDS: Morpholino oligonucleotide, Oligonucleotide sensor, Biosensor, Hydrogel, microRNA. a
b
ABSTRACT: Morpholino Oligonucleotides (MOs), an uncharged DNA analogue, are functionalized with an acrylamide moiety and incorporated into polymer hydrogels as responsive crosslinks for microRNA sequence detection. The MO crosslinks can be selectively cleaved by a short target analyte single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) sequence based on microRNA, inducing a distinct swelling response measured optically. The MO crosslinks offer significant improvement over DNA based systems through improved thermal stability, no salt requirement and 1000-fold improved sensitivity over a comparative biosensor, facilitating a wider range of sensing conditions. Analysis was also achieved using a mobile phone camera, demonstrating portability.
Hydrogels are crosslinked hydrophilic polymers that can swell to absorb large volumes of water. Responsive hydrogels are important smart materials able to respond to external stimuli such as pH, temperature and a wide variety of other biomarkers.1–5 These networks have shown promise in various applications such as controlled drug release,6 wound healing7 and biosensing.8 DNA-based hydrogels using designed single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) sequences have been extensively investigated as responsive hydrogels, utilising nucleic acid Watson-Crick base pairing rules or DNA secondary structures to facilitate specific biorecognition.9–12 Pure DNA hydrogels have been synthesised using 3- or 4- way crosslinks, linked using T4 DNA ligase to form networked DNA, and subsequently shown to release a variety of drugs, proteins or cells during DNA degradation.13 In sensing applications, acrydite-modified ssDNA was immobilised in polyacrylamide chains that, when mixed with partially complementary ssDNA that forms a crosslink, has been used to bring about gelation which can then be reversed in response to an analyte that displaces the DNA crosslink.14,15 One strand of the crosslink is fully complementary to the analyte sequence, such that the analyte will displace the partially complementary strand and break the crosslink (Fig 1a and b). Similarly, partially complementary acryditemodified ssDNA crosslinks have been copolymerised with acrylamide and a covalent crosslinker, N,N′-methylenebis(acrylamide) (MBA), to form gels to detect short DNA sequences.16–18 In this case, there is no gel-sol transition due to the covalent crosslinks, rather that reduction in crosslink density allows the gel to absorb more water and swell to a greater volume (Fig 1c). DNA crosslinked hydrogels have several inherent limitations including thermal denaturation, solvent interactions and a salt requirement.19 These issues are exacerbated when using short ssDNA sequences (ca. 22 nucleotides) as required for microRNA (miRNA) detection.20,21 miRNA have garnered substantial attention as potential biomarkers able to differentiate a wide variety of pathologies.22 In particular, circulating miRNA (either as free miRNA or contained in cell secreted exosomes) from saliva, urine, blood or other extracellular fluids have become a target for biosensor design.23 Despite this, difficulties in detection remain, in particular due to the low concentrations of miRNA (~1 pM - ~10 fM in serum).24,25 Established
miRNA detection methods such as RT-qPCR and microarrays (Limit of detection (LoD) fM - aM and nM - pM respectively)26offer high sensitivity and multiplexing, yet typically require centralised labs, expensive reagents and relatively long times to results (1 day or more). Techniques reliant on fluorescence (LoD nM - fM)27 have issues such as bleaching or auto-fluorescence, while microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) or nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS) (LoD aM - µM)28 typically have a relatively complex fabrication process. Recent work showed the benefits of using synthetic DNA analogues in hydrogels, utilising a mixture of peptide nucleic acid (PNA) in a “hybrid” crosslink with ssDNA to form crosslinked salt-free hydrogels,29 although some challenges remain. We investigate herein Morpholino Oligonucleotide (MO) crosslinked hydrogels. MOs are synthetic DNA analogues with an uncharged backbone consisting of morpholine rings connected by phosphorodiamidate groups (Figure 1d).30 This uncharged backbone results in stronger DNA binding and reduced salt dependence whilst maintaining high water solubility and avoiding enzymatic degradation.31 The increased rigidity of the backbone also reduces self-hybridisation. The benefits of MOs have been assessed in electrochemical studies32,33 and microarrays34 but have hitherto been unused in responsive hydrogels or in other fields using oligonucleotide interactions such as DNA nanotechnology. We present the first MO crosslinked hydrogels (MOCHs) as a means of label-free ssDNA detection and assess the benefits of MO crosslinks with regards to future automation and processing. MOCHs included both physical (hydrogen bonded MOs) and covalent crosslinks (MBA) (Figure 1e). The MO crosslinks consisted of two strands, the “sensor” strand had full complementarity for the chosen “analyte” ssDNA sequence, while the “blocker” strand was partially complementary to the sensor strand, such that the blocker strand will be displaced by the analyte ssDNA sequence. Displacement of the blocker strand breaks the physical crosslinks of the gel facilitating greater swelling while binding of the ssDNA will also change the ionic charge of the gel macrostructure. In this work we selected the miRNA sequence miR92a (Table 1, A1), which has potential as a biomarker for leukaemia when compared to miR-638 concentrations.20 This sensor design can be easily adapted to target any miRNA sequence and the blocker
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toehold length can be altered to account for weaker sequences with fewer GC base pairs.
Materials. All materials were purchased from Sigma Aldrich and used as received, except for the Morpholino Oligonucleotides and ssDNA oligonucleotide sequences (Table 1) which were purchased from GeneTools and IDT Technologies, respectively. Table 1. Morpholino Oligonucleotide sequences. S1: 5′-ACA GGC CGG GAC AAG TGC AAT A-3′ B1: 5′-TAT TGC ACT TGT-3′ A1: 5′-TAT TGC ACT TGT CCC GGC CTG T-3′ AMM1: 5’-TAT TGC CCT TGT CCC GGC CTG T-3’ AMM5: 5’-TAG TGC ACT TGT GCG GCC CTG G-3’ R1: 5′-ACG TCT AGA CGT AAC GAA GGT C-3′ Sensor (S1) and blocker (B1) units have acrylamide moiety at 5’ end for integration in polyacrylamide hydrogels. The analyte sequence (A1) is taken from miRNA 92a-1.20 Complementarity with S1 are highlighted in red and underlined. S1 and B1 are 12 base pair complementary. A1 is fully complementary to S1, AMM1 and AMM5 have 1 and 5 mismatches with regard to S1 respectively. R1 is a randomly generated sequence and has only 6 noncontiguous base pair complementary to S1.
Figure 1 (a) Sequences of the morpholino oligonucleotide (MO) crosslink, tethered in polymer at the 5’ end. (b) Displacement of the MO blocker strand by the analyte strand to break the crosslink. (c) Morpholino Oligonucleotide Crosslinked Hydrogel (MOCH) system showing displacement of blocker strand (yellow) from sensor strand (blue) by analyte sequence (red), facilitating greater swelling. (d) Structure of MO with 5’ acrylamide for copolymerization with acrylamide where “R” is any of nucleobases ACGT. Full structure in Figure S1. (e) UV-initiated radical polymerization of acrylamide (10 wt%), functionalized MOs (0.4 mol %) and MBA (0.6 mol %) to form MOCH through radical initiation (0.125 mol %) where mol % is relative to acrylamide.
EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
Morpholino Oligonucleotide Preparation. Equimolar S1 and B1 MOs were dissolved in distilled water (at a concentration of 1 mM) and aliquoted in appropriate quantities. Mixtures were then heated to 95 °C for 2 min, cooled to room temperature and subsequently freeze-dried as smaller aliquots for use in gel preparation. Sample Preparation. Pre-gel solutions were prepared from stock monomer solutions of acrylamide (AAm), N,N′-methylene bisacrylamide (MBA) and NaCl in pH 7.4 phosphate buffer with 1hydroxycyclohexyl phenyl ketone (HPK) in ethylene glycol as a radical photoinitiator. Mixing of these stocks with 0-150 mM NaCl gave final concentrations of 10 wt% AAm with 0.6 mol % MBA and 0.13 mol % HPK with regard to AAm. Pre-gel stocks contained carbon nanopowder (